Monday, October 31, 2011

New way to rate severity of colitis, a common cause of diarrhea

ScienceDaily (Oct. 31, 2011) ? Mayo Clinic researchers have developed a new way to assess a common cause of chronic diarrhea, microscopic colitis, using the Microscopic Colitis Disease Activity Index. A study describing the index was released October 31 during the American College of Gastroenterology 2011 Annual Scientific Meeting and Postgraduate Course in Washington. The index provides a consistent way to assess the condition's severity.

"Until now, physicians have not had a way to objectively and consistently score the severity of a patient's disease beyond simply counting the number of bowel movements per day," says author Darrell Pardi, M.D., a Mayo Clinic gastroenterologist. The assessment also accounts for symptoms other than diarrhea, such as abdominal pain, urgency, and incontinence.

"This assessment is a significant step forward, as it correlates a patient's symptoms with the physicians' understanding of the severity of microscopic colitis," Dr. Pardi says. Using the assessment index in future studies, researchers will more easily compare treatments for this condition.

Microscopic colitis is recognized as a common cause of chronic diarrhea, causing perhaps 30 percent of all cases of the condition in older patients. Microscopic colitis is a chronic, inflammatory condition of the large intestine (colon) that causes watery diarrhea and, sometimes, abdominal pain. The disorder gets its name from the microscopic examination of tissue required to identify it.

Other study authors include: Rami F. Abboud, M.D.; Meredith McNally, M.D.; William J. Tremaine, M.D.; William J. Sandborn, M.D.; Patricia P. Kammer, M.D.; W. Scott Harmsen, M.D.; Alan R. Zinsmeister, M.D.; Edward V. Loftus, M.D.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Mayo Clinic.

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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/y3LRNjDb1Gc/111031132213.htm

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Raghida Dergham: Is the West Hijacking Arab Revolutions to the Benefit of Islamists?

Dubai -- While the West speaks of the necessity of accepting the results of the democratic process, in terms of Islamists coming to power in the Arab region, there are increased suspicions regarding the goals pursued by the West in its new policy of rapprochement with the Islamist movement, in what is a striking effort at undermining modern, secular and liberal movements. The three North African countries in which revolutions of change have taken place are witnessing a transitional process that is noteworthy, not just in domestic and local terms, but also in terms of the roles played by foreign forces, both regional and international. The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt is trying to hijack the youth's revolution with the help of the West. This is while bearing in mind that Egypt is considered to be the "command center" for the Muslim Brotherhood's network in different Arab countries.

The followers of the An-Nahda in Tunisia are wrapping their message with moderation as they prepare to hijack the democracy that Tunisia's youth dream of, while being met by applause and encouragement from the West in the name of the "fairness" of the electoral process. Libya, where the North Atlantic Alliance (NATO) is in a "marriage of convenience" with Islamist rebels, has become a hub of extremism and lawlessness, with a plethora of military aid being collected by an assortment of armed Islamists who aim to exclude others from power. In Yemen, where a struggle for power rages on, a war is taking place between extremism and a harsher and more violent brand of extremism, with so-called "moderate Islam" in the middle as a means of salvation, even as the latter's ideology remains neither modern nor liberal, and is rather lacking when it comes to the fundamentals of democracy and equality.

In Syria, where the battle for freedom is at its most difficult phase, the youths of the revolution fear what could very much be under discussion behind the scenes between the West and the Islamist movements, in terms of collaboration and of strengthening the Islamists' hold on power, in a clear bid to hijack the revolution of a youth that aspires to freedom in its every sense, not to yet another brand of tyranny and authoritarianism. Yet despite increasing talk and concern over the unnatural relationship between the West and Islamist movements in the Arab region, there is growing insistence among the region's enlightened and modern youths that they will not allow this relationship to direct their lives and dictate their course. It would thus be more logical for the West to listen carefully to what is happening at the youths' scene, as well as on the traditional secularist and modernist scenes, and to realize the danger of what it is doing for these elements and the road to change brought about by the Arab Spring.

The obsession of some Westerners with the so-called "Turkish model" of "moderate Islam," able to rule with discipline and democracy, seems na?ve, essentially because of its assumption that such a model can automatically be applied on the Arab scene, without carefully considering the different background and conditions that exist in Turkey and the Arab countries. There is also some naivety in assuming that the "Iranian model" of religious autocratic rule that oppresses people, forbids pluralism and turns power into tyranny, can be excluded as a possibility. What the movements of modernity, freedom and democracy in the Arab region fear is the replication of the Iranian experience and its revival on the Arab scene. What took place in 1979 after the Iranian Revolution is that the Mullahs hijacked it, excluded the youths from it and monopolized power in the "Islamic Republic" of Iran for more than 30 years.

Perhaps the West purposely encouraged what happened to Iran and its exceptional civilization by taking it back to the Dark Ages, to live in seclusion and isolation as a result of the tyranny of the Mullahs. Perhaps taking Iran more than 50 years back in time was a Western goal, which would explain their encouragement for the peaceful nature of this revolution to be hijacked. It should be stressed here that it was Iran's 1979 revolution that sparked, throughout the Arab region, the movement of reverting to social rigidity instead of modernity and advancement. The environment created by the rule of the Mullahs in Iran led to restricting efforts in neighboring Arab Gulf region, which became unable to embrace modernity for fear of its repercussions and consequences. In fact, hawkishness gained more ground in the Arab Gulf as a means of containing religious extremism. Thus, sectarianism increased hand in hand with extremism, and the whole region became thoroughly consumed by the struggle of religions, away from the social development necessary to accompany the structural development represented by buildings, installations and other basic infrastructure.

The countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) play numerous roles, sometimes in concordance, and sometimes in contradiction and mutual opposition. The common denominator among them is preserving the monarchy and keeping the Arab Spring far from the Gulf region with a certain extent of reform, which could either be costly for the regimes or for their relationship with Islamists -- be they moderates or extremists. What is even more noteworthy is what is being said about the Islamic Republic of Iran, in terms of its occasional support of groups allied with the Muslim Brotherhood, which it sees as a means to weaken the influence of Saudi Arabia in the region.

Also noteworthy is the fact that the United Arab Emirates is supporting the movement closest to modernism in Libya by providing support in the form of training the police force and strengthening it with equipment. This is while Qatar supports Islamist movements with training and weapons, which undermines the ability of "non-Islamists" to compete for power, and in fact leads to excluding them from power. Regarding Syria, on the other hand, the UAE is worried about what regional interference could lead to, and fears what reaches the extent of preparing for after the revolution. This is why it hesitates to support the Syrian opposition despite its desire -- which it has, in fact, sometimes acted on -- to provide some support to non-Islamist forces.

GCC countries always have Iran on their mind, as it does them, especially through the relationship between Saudi Arabia and Iran, and the many dimensions of the relationship between Sunnis and Shiites. Examining how the West's policies have evolved regarding this aspect in particular, would require greater space and a more in-depth study. Yet it is noteworthy that former U.S. President George W. Bush strengthened the standing of the Islamic Republic of Iran, its influence and its regional ambitions of hegemony, through his war in Iraq. As for the current President, Barack Obama, he seems to be in the process of strengthening "moderate Islam," specifically among Sunnis, for it to be the means to confront both Sunni and Shiite extremism, in a policy of attracting "moderate Islam" even at the cost of undermining the forces of modernity, advancement and secularism, and pulling the rug from under their feet. This policy of Obama's is no less dangerous than that of Bush. They both played the sectarian card at the expense of secularism, and they both adopted policies that lead to weakening the forces of moderation and strengthening the forces of extremism, regardless of whether it is "moderate extremism," as it at the end of the day is based on the ideology of monopolizing power and not separating religion and state.

Shirin Ebadi, the Iranian judge, human rights activist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, addressed the women of the Arab awakening at the Women's Forum in Deauville, France, and said: Do not repeat our mistake. She said that the separation of religion and state is the only guarantee of democracy, not because the flaw lies in the Sharia itself, but because it can be interpreted by men who want more domination, and who view democracy as an enemy of their monopoly, one that takes away powers they have hijacked and purposely kept women away from.

At the same conference, the Yemeni participant, a friend of Tawakel Karman, the first Arab woman to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, said that Tawakel is affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, and that, compared to the "Salafists," this group represents moderation itself, as well as salvation. This is an opinion which seems to have been embraced by the West, strengthened and driven forward amid the applause of Islamist movements that present themselves as the alternative moderation, blocking the way for movements of modernity by mounting the steed of democracy, most likely on a single path from which there is no return.

They are inflating themselves and their size, and entering into a temporary marriage with the West -- which in their opinion is na?ve -- a marriage of convenience that is to their benefit as long as it breaks the back of secularists and modernists. In truth, the democratic U.S. administration is not the only one encouraging Islamist movements to take such a course, as there are also some republicans like Senator John McCain. McCain made sure to address Islamists from the rostrum of the World Economic Forum at the Dead Sea during a seminar on the American-Arab relationship, calling for respecting their rights to power, and thereby sending two messages: one to Islamists under the headline "we are with you," and the other to the modernists under the headline "we do not care about you".

There are two schools of thought that do not agree with the opinion that there is no escape from accepting the movements of "moderate Islam" because they have been victorious in the revolutions and base themselves on the change brought by the Arab Spring. Those two schools do not agree that the Arab Spring is the spring of Islamists, and they do not agree to the claim that they are the makers of the Arab awakening or spring. These two schools want to stop the Islamists from hijacking the Arab Awakening and climbing to power with the help of the West, whether the latter is na?ve or ill-intentioned.

One school says: let the Islamists rule the Arab region, as this is an opportunity to prove their failure at controlling a people that does not want them. Those affiliated with this school point to Hamas and the Palestinian people's reactions to it, in not accepting it and Islamist rule. They believe that the Arab people will defeat Islamist movements, and that they will fail. Then the modernists will return nearly victorious and welcomed by the people, and things will move forward. This, then, is an opportunity to prove the sure failure of Islamists, so let them fail.

The other school says: the greatest mistake is for the modernists to dwindle and withdraw from the battle now, because the Islamists reaching power will consolidate their rule for decades, not years. We must therefore immediately demand a transitional phase that would give these movements the opportunity to organize into political parties and enter the elections. This is while bearing in mind that the only organized party is that of the Islamists, having been the only opposition movement under the former rulers. Those who are of this opinion insist on yielding neither to the cunning of the Islamists nor to the naivety of the West, and on launching an awareness campaign for world public opinion about Islamists and Western governments hijacking the Arab Spring in order to exclude the modernists, young and old equally.

It would be more logical for Western capitals to hear and to listen closely, because their partnership in hijacking the Arab youth's ambitions of freedom, pluralism, democracy and modernity will come at high cost for them -- not just for the path of change that has emerged from the soul of the youths of the Arab Spring.

RaghidaDergham.com

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Follow Raghida Dergham on Twitter: www.twitter.com/raghidadergham

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/raghida-dergham/the-west-is-hijacking-ara_b_1064180.html

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

World stocks, euro hit two-month high after EU summit (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) ? World stocks and the euro rose to their highest levels in nearly two months on Thursday after European leaders struck a deal to resolve a two-year-old sovereign debt crisis, which threatens the survival of the single currency.

Brent crude and copper prices also rallied. Prices in safe-haven U.S. Treasuries and German Bunds fell, though those from other highly indebted euro zone countries gained.

The deal, announced in the early hours of Thursday, will see private bondholders of Greek debt accept a 50 percent loss on their investment, while banks will be recapitalized and the size of the currency bloc's rescue fund will be leveraged to 1 trillion euros ($1.4 trillion).

"Even though details are not yet in place, the extension of the (rescue fund) will build a firewall between Greece and the rest," said Philippe Gijsels, head of research at BNP Paribas Fortis Global Markets in Brussels.

"With the agreement on a 50 percent haircut for Greece, quite a bit of uncertainty has been taken off the table as well ... The restoration of confidence is an important step in the healing process. However, we will see whether the recovery in risky assets has legs."

Europe's FTSEurofirst 300 (.FTEU3) gained 2.5 percent, with European banks (.SX7P) surging 4.4 percent, while yields on 10-year Greek government bonds fell 15.3 basis points to 24.87 percent.

World stocks measured by the MSCI All-Country World Index advanced 1.7 percent to hit their highest level since early September.

The global benchmark is up 10.6 percent so far this month, on track for its biggest monthly gain in more than two years, driven by hopes that euro zone policymakers would announce a decisive plan to end the two-year-old turmoil at the summit.

"It would be clearly premature to declare the euro crisis as fully resolved. Much more needs to be done, especially regarding fiscal consolidation," Credit Suisse Private Banking said. "Achieving such a consolidation will be difficult in a phase of slow growth, or in some cases recession."

"Nevertheless, it is our impression that EU leaders have made significant progress on all fronts. This suggests that the rebound in risk assets that has been underway in recent days may well continue for some time."

The euro was up 0.9 percent at $1.4021 and 0.4 percent at 106.37 yen.

The announcement also boosted high-yielding currencies, with the Australian dollar up 1.4 percent at $1.0541.

Copper was up 2.4 percent and on track for its best weekly percentage gain since February 2009, while Brent crude rose 1.7 percent to above $110 a barrel.

(Additional reporting by Kirsten Donovan Atul Prakash and Joanne Frearson; editing by Anna Willard)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111027/bs_nm/us_markets_global

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Romney Leads or Ties in First Four States (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/153801158?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Andy Rooney Hospitalized for Surgery Complications

Andy Rooney Hospitalized for Surgery Complications

Andy Rooney, who signed off from 60 Minutes earlier this month after 33 years and 1,097 video essays, has been hospitalized for complications arising from minor surgery her underwent last week.

According to a statement released by CBS, the 92-year-old journalist and commentator "suffered serious complications" following the procedure, but is now in "stable" condition.

The reason for Rooney's surgery and the nature of the complications have yet to be disclosed.

"I wish I could do this forever. I can't though," Rooney said in his farewell essay, which aired Oct. 2 on CBS. "But I'm not retiring. Writers don't retire and I'll always be a writer."

Here's to hoping Rooney is still captivating us with his words for years to come.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/andy-rooney-hospitalized-surgery-complications/1-a-396329

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Rotor Concept HPQ-1 quadcopter eyes-on (video)

Rotor Concept Inc.
We're here at the PhotoPlus show in New York, and as usual, the stranger products are being showcased on the outskirts of the show. A company called Rotor Concept out of Southern California was showing off the HPQ-1, a quadcopter designed to lug around your digital camera.The copter itself is surprisingly quiet and steady, the latter of which is no doubt helped out by the presence of four propellers and advanced stabilization system (put the controller down and it will automatically hold its position).

The HPQ-1 can hold payloads of up to 12 ounces, so users can use standard digital cameras to live stream events or a pair of smaller shooters to capture arial 3D clips. According to the company, SWAT teams are looking into using the product for surveillance. The other recommended usage? Weddings, of course. The copter can reach a max altitude of 2,000 feet and has a theoretical maximum flight radius of up to a mile. It's available now for an MSRP of $899. Peep a quick video after the break.

Terrence O'Brien contributed to this report.

Continue reading Rotor Concept HPQ-1 quadcopter eyes-on (video)

Rotor Concept HPQ-1 quadcopter eyes-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Oct 2011 12:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/cS7x4EGZ6n4/

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Hugo Chavez: 'There is no government in Libya' (AP)

CARACAS, Venezuela ? Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez says he won't recognize Libya's new government, and he predicts there will be more war in the country.

Chavez says that as far as Venezuela is concerned "there is no government in Libya."

The Venezuelan leader again condemned the killing of Moammar Gadhafi, whom he had considered a friend. He defended Gadhafi throughout the conflict in Libya and has condemned NATO's military involvement in the country.

Chavez said Wednesday that NATO has effectively "installed a government" in Libya through the conflict.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_venezuela_libya

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Tasting rooms offer tough-to-get wines under one roof

Mark Anthony / Nectar Tasting Room

A crowd mingles and drinks wine at the Nectar Tasting Room in Spokane, Wash.

By Elaine Porterfield, msnbc.com contributor

A wine tasting vacation sounds like a wonderful way to suss out unique, handcrafted vintages, or experience the fun of discovering a new boutique winery off the beaten path. The reality, though, often involves driving miles and miles between stops, irregular or appointment-only visiting hours at smaller wineries and the difficulty of comparing wines between various makers. Throw in the cost of staying at a wine country hotel, and you have a recipe for a sometimes less-than-satisfying getaway.

Enter the multiple winery tasting room, a kind of hybrid between a wine bar and a traditional winery. Whether in wine country or urban locations, these tasting rooms let wine lovers taste and compare wine from smaller or tiny wineries that might not be easily available to the public. Though exact statistics aren?t available, these tasting rooms seem to be growing in number, say those in the business. Most differ from traditional wine bars in that they typically emphasize education and tasting from a specific region, and often serve minimal food, such as cheese plates.

In 2002, Carolyn Lewis opened Locals in Geyersville, Calif., to allow people to try wines from the many small makers in the region. ?After I had moved out here from the East Coast, I kept finding the (small makers) to be closed to tasting or not available,? Lewis said. ?So I opened this so I could bring the really teeny guys into the spotlight.?

Locals specializes in flight tastings, which allow visitors to taste, for example, several zinfandels from different makers side by side, allowing them to easily discern what style they prefer. Many of the 10 wineries she showcases are tiny and rural, Lewis said: ?It?s a constant comment from our customers, ?We wish we could have found you first ? we don?t have to drive from place to place here.? ?

Furthermore, she works to keep it affordable; all tastings of the 70 wines currently offered are free and she strives to keep the markup on the bottles of wine she sells reasonable. ?You can easily be spending $25 for a tasting in Napa Valley? at just one winery nowadays, Lewis points out.

In Washington state, the second largest wine producing state in the nation after California, multiple winery tasting rooms are also popping up. At Spokane's Nectar Tasting Room, a cooperative between five wineries, education is key. Visitors to the tasting room are given an iPad to allow them to learn about the wines on offer and to keep records of their own likes and dislikes from visit to visit, said Josh Wade, the brainchild behind the venture. Wade, who also blogs about wine, says customers really enjoy the ability to easily compare a few of the 50 different Washington wines offered, available by the taste or by the glass.?

?People who are intimidated by wine or who just know enough to buy a bottle, this helps soften the experience,? Wade said. Nectar has been successful enough that there are plans to open a second location in mid-2012, in the Bavarian-themed town of Leavenworth in north central Washington, he said.

At the Tasting Room Yakima, which also has a location in Seattle?s historic Pike Place Market, customers love the ease of trying wines from several small Washington vintners and learning more about them, said manager Angela O?Connor.

?A lot of places don?t have nearly as many choices as we do,? O?Connor said. ?A lot of people we see are just getting started drinking wine or paying attention to varying types of wine or are just stuck in a rut of trying the same mass-produced wine. We can get some boutique producers in their hands here.?

More stories you might like:

Source: http://itineraries.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/10/24/8470575-tasting-rooms-offer-tough-to-get-wines-under-one-roof

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The last word on digital terrestrial television broadcasts

At least, I hope the last survey! This is a survey from DIMSDRIVE Research into digital terrestrial television that was conducted in February, published in July, and finally translated by me in October.

Demographics

Between the 10th and 24th of February 2011 7,237 members of the DIMSDRIVE Research monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 54.5% of the sample were male, 0.9% in their teens, 9.3% in their twenties, 27.8% in their thirties, 32.1% in their forties, 18.4% in their fifties, and 11.5% aged sixty or older.

As everything?s a bit out of date now that the digital switchover is history, instead here?s a countdown to the switchoever:

Research results

Q1: Are any of your televisions at home digital terrestrial-ready? (Sample size=7,237)

Just 64.3% of those living alone were digital-ready, 30% of then weren?t and 5.7% didn?t know or didn?t have one. All the other groups had roughly the same split as the total values above. About 87% who owned a house or flat were digital-ready, whereas just 73% of those renting were.

Q1SQ1: Other than a television what kinds of digitial terrestrial-ready devices do you have? (Sample size=7,110, multiple answer)

One Seg mobile phone 35.4%
Computer with built-in digital tuner 18.3%
Car navigation 13.7%
One Seg television 8.1%
Digital tuner for computer 6.1%
Portable games machine 4.7%
Other 3.3%
Don?t know 3.5%
No other devices 39.3%

Q1SQ2: What prompted you to get a digital terrestrial-ready television? (Sample size=5,978, multiple answer)

Replaced a broken television 25.8%
Eco points system started 21.7%
Digital broadcasts started in my area 17.7%
Saw on-screen message about the end of analogue broadcasts 12.3%
Saw a digital terrestrial television advertisement 11.9%
Saw news about it on a television program, other media 9.1%
Friends, family recommended it 7.2%
Was in vogue 5.1%
Other 11.4%
Just because 11.8%

Q1SQ3: How is your television digital terrestrial-ready? (Sample size=5,978, multiple answer)

Television with built-in digital terrestrial tuner 84.7%
VCR, HDR, etc with built-in digital terrestrial tuner 21.7%
Separate digital terrestrial tuner 12.3%
Other 5.4%
Don?t know 3.6%

Q1SQ4: What do you feel are the attractions of digital terrestrial-television? (Sample size=5,978, multiple answer)

Good picture quality 76.0%
Data broadcast 29.2%
Electronic program guide 28.6%
Easy to record from electronic program guide 23.5%
Widescreen pictures 22.1%
Individual program guides 20.5%
Good sound quality 18.5%
Digital high-vision broadcast 17.8%
Subtitles 8.7%
Simultaneous data broadcast (quizzes, votes, etc) 7.3%
Many simultaneous program broadast 6.4%
5.1 channel sound 5.2%
Explanatory broadcast 3.5%
Multiple stereo audio channels 3.2%
Two-language audio broadcasts 3.1%
Can change audio speed 1.4%
Other 0.7%
Nothing in particular 13.7%

Q1SQ5: Why haven?t you upgraded to digital terrestrial-ready television yet? (Sample size=1,132, multiple answer)

Can still watch analogue broadcast 51.6%
Don?t have the money to upgrade 22.4%
Waiting for the price to drop 21.6%
A bother to upgrade 13.8%
Waiting for an expected distribution of tuners 8.0%
Will stop watching television after analogue ends 5.8%
Computer is digital terrestrial-ready 4.6%
Other device is digital terrestrial-ready 4.3%
Shared accomodation is not digital terrestrial-ready 4.2%
Don?t know what?s so good about it 3.8%
Seems difficult to set up 2.7%
Don?t know how to switch to digital terrestrial 2.5%
Mobile phone is digital terrestrial-ready 2.2%
System seems difficult 2.2%
Digital broadcasts have copy limitations 1.9%
Can?t yet watch digital terrestrial in my area 1.2%
Signal strength seems unreliable 1.0%
Other 7.8%
Nothing in particular 10.4%

Q1SQ6: When do you plan to upgrade to digital terrestrial-ready television? (Sample size=1,132)

February 2011 1.9%
March 2011 7.4%
April 2011 4.5%
May 2011 6.9%
June 2011 10.0%
July 2011 12.9%
August 2011 or later 1.2%
Not decided yet (to Q2) 40.1%
Don?t plan to upgrade (to Q2) 15.1%

Q1SQ7: To what do you plan to upgrade to for digital terrestrial-ready television? (Sample size=507, multiple answer)

LCD television 63.7%
Television-compatible digital terrestrial tuner 25.4%
Plasma television 20.9%
Recording device with a built-in digital tuner 10.8%
Get cable television 5.3%
3D television 4.7%
OLED television 4.3%
Flets television (fibre delivery) 3.0%
Other television type 1.4%
Other 1.0%
Don?t know, not decided 11.0%

Q2: How do you feel about the switchover to digital terrestrial television? (Sample size=7,237, multiple answer)

Positive opinions

? Digital-ready Not digital-ready
Feel the attraction of digital broadast picture, sound quality 50.8% 17.5%
Good that one can get eco points 27.1% 3.4%
Have expectations for sufficient service in the future 19.0% 9.7%
Can enjoy high vision broadcast 19.3% 8.0%
Good to get financial subsidies 11.5% 15.0%
Feel the attraction of ?o???? service 7.6% 4.4%
Good that I can view broadcasts on my computer 5.8% 5.2%
Good that there are sufficient services oriented to old folks, disabled 4.2% 2.4%

Negative opinions

? Digital-ready Not digital-ready
Feels a waste to throw away the television I?m using 35.5% 51.6%
Dislike feeling compelled to upgrade 20.3% 45.8%
It?s a probelm finding the money to upgrade 19,3% 42.1%
Analogue television is sufficient 15.0% 41.8%
Worried that there will be digital terrestrial-deprived people 16.6% 21.%
Don?t feel any merits of digital terrestrial 10.9% 28.4%
Dissatisfied with the strict copy protection 13.9% 11.6%
Not sufficient information about it 5.8% 12.5%
Worried whether I can get used to it 4.4% 6.4%
Don?t think the sound, picture quality is as good as I thought 4.2% 4.4%
None of the above 8.3% 11.7%
Read more on: digital,dimsdrive research,television,terrestrial

Permalink

Related articles:

  • One in six still has no digital television
  • Four in five already prepared for terrestrial analogue switch-off
  • One in four not using digital broadcast extra features
  • Almost all Japanese aware that terrestrial analogue television is going away
  • Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/WhatJapanThinks/~3/Y_W2CMk0RFw/

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    Tuesday, October 25, 2011

    Dr. Conrad Murray Defense Team in Shambles


    As if Dr. Conrad Murray's defense team didn't have its work cut out for it already, the legal ensemble is starting to fracture amid reports of persistent infighting.

    Ed Chernoff, Dr. Murray's lead attorney, is from Houston and had been staying with another member of the team, J. Michael Flanagan, to save Murray money. 

    But he moved out from Flanagan's digs a week and a half ago. "Ed didn't like the way Michael was handling the prosecution witnesses," says a close source.

    Dr. Conrad Murray at Trial

    Murray is charged with involuntary manslaughter in the death of Michael Jackson.

    "Ed felt that Michael was too abrasive and caustic with his questioning, and that Michael allowed witnesses to clarify points that only helped the prosecution."

    "Things were getting very tense, and he's moved into a hotel in Santa Monica," a source close to Dr. Conrad Murray said, after the final straw this month.

    Courtroom onlookers were stunned as Chernoff decided he was going to be handling the questioning of the DA's expert medical witness, Dr. Steven Shafer.

    "Flanagan had prepared for approximately four months to cross examine Dr. Shafer," the insider said. "Michael was thoroughly prepared and ready."

    "When Ed told Michael that he would be handling Dr. Shafer, he felt like the rug was pulled out from under him. There is nothing Michael can do about it."

    "Ed is the lead attorney in the case, but Michael was specifically brought on board to handle the medical aspects of the case, along with the witnesses."

    "Ed and Michael are barely talking to each other... Michael, whose area of expertise is Propofol, has essentially been frozen out for the time being."

    There is also the matter of a defense witness possibly being held in contempt of court for calling Deputy DA David Walgren a "scumbag" in a TV interview.

    "Chernoff was LIVID that Dr. White, the defense's anesthesia expert, made those comments to the press, but his entire case essentially rests with him."

    "Flanagan is still under the assumption that he will be handling questioning of Dr. White, but Ed could very likely commandeer the questioning of him also."

    "Nareg Gourjian, the third lawyer on the team, is just keeping his head down, and staying out of the drama. Nareg will question several defense witnesses."

    Read the full report at Radar Online.

    Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/10/dr-conrad-murray-defense-team-in-shambles/

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    Monday, October 24, 2011

    NICT, JVC Kenwood team up for wall-sized 3D HD display, lets in your face advertising get literal (video)

    Been holding out hope for a real-life holodeck? Well, looks like Japan's got wall number one out of four already covered. We kid, we kid. That Trekkie tech future's still a ways off, but recent prototypes like this 200-inch auto-stereoscopic 3D screen are bringing that illusive reality one step closer to our living rooms. Exhibited during CEATEC 2011, this 1920 x 1080 full HD display plays images at 60fps using an array of 57 projectors, and offers up viewing angles of 13 degrees. What does all of that mean for you? Well, the setup gives viewers a limited ability to peer around projected objects, so long as they stay within a 1.3m (about 4ft) area. It's yet another fruit of the collaboration between the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology and JVC Kenwood, except this one's headed for the realm of outdoor digital advertising. Home theater aficionados looking for a virtual entertainment solution can always opt for Sony's HMD, but that kind of defeats the glasses-free allure.

    Continue reading NICT, JVC Kenwood team up for wall-sized 3D HD display, lets in your face advertising get literal (video)

    NICT, JVC Kenwood team up for wall-sized 3D HD display, lets in your face advertising get literal (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Oct 2011 16:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink DigInfo TV  |  sourceCEATEC (Translated)  | Email this | Comments


    Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/iU6E-YIRi5I/

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    German satellite falling to Earth

    A big German spacecraft is making an uncontrolled fall from the sky.

    The Roentgen Satellite (Rosat) re-entered the Earth's atmosphere between 01:45 and 02:15 GMT.

    Just as for Nasa's UARS satellite, which plunged into the atmosphere in September, no-one was able to say precisely when and this would happen.

    What makes the redundant German craft's return interesting is that much more debris this time is likely to survive all the way to the Earth's surface.

    Experts calculate that perhaps as much as 1.6 tonnes of wreckage - more than half the spacecraft's launch mass - could ride out the destructive forces of re-entry and hit the planet.

    It is not clear whether any pieces have yet reached the Earth's surface.

    In the case of UARS, the probable mass of surviving material was put at only half a tonne (out of a launch mass of more than six tonnes).

    The difference is due to some more robust components on the German space agency (DLR) satellite.

    Rosat was an X-ray telescope mission and had a mirror system made of a reinforced carbon composite material. This mirror complex and its support structure are expected to form the largest single fragment in what could be a shower of some 30 pieces of debris to make it through to the surface.

    But again, as was the case with UARS, any Rosat wreckage is strongly tipped to hit the ocean, given that so much of the Earth's surface is covered by water.

    Destructive design

    UARS' final resting place was tracked to a remote region of the Pacific, north-east of the Samoan islands.

    Rosat could come down anywhere between 53 degrees North and South latitude - a zone that encompasses the UK in the north and the tip of South America in the south.

    Future spacecraft sent into orbit may have to meet stricter guidelines that limit the amount of debris likely to fall back on to the planet, but these rules are still some way from being introduced said Prof Richard Crowther, an expert on space debris and adviser to the UK Space Agency.

    "Up until now we've designed satellites to survive the harsh environment of space, and we haven't given much thought to designing them for destructive re-entry," he told BBC News.

    "But in future, we will have to consider whether we have got this balance right, and perhaps satellites should be designed in such a way that we can ensure more of what comes down is destroyed in the atmosphere and doesn't hit the surface.

    "Unfortunately, there is a whole legacy of spacecraft - 50 years of satellites - and we are going to have to put up with this situation for quite some time, I'm afraid."

    Science success

    Rosat was launched in 1990 to survey the X-ray sky. It mapped more than 100,000 sources of this high-energy radiation. X-rays tend to come from the hottest and most violent parts of the cosmos, such as the regions around exploded stars and the "edges" of black holes.

    The spacecraft worked for eight-and-a-half years before its star tracker failed and it could no-longer work out its position and point correctly. It was shut down in February 1999, and has been in descent ever since. Controllers do not have any contact with the craft; all they know is its altitude and path across the sky through radar tracking.

    The fall to Earth has accelerated in recent months and weeks as the spacecraft has experienced increased drag as a result of its passage through residual air molecules still found more than 200km above the planet.

    The deeper it reaches, the faster Rosat will be pulled in. But without a propulsion system, the precise timing and location of its impact cannot be influenced by controllers.

    Tough materials

    Rosat will start to tumble rapidly when it engages the thicker parts of the atmosphere, about 80km up.

    Mechanical forces will first rip off its flimsiest structures, such as its solar arrays and antennas.

    The heating the satellite then experiences as it plunges downwards will deform and melt low-temperature materials and vaporise them.

    Only high-temperature metals such as stainless steel and titanium will put up much resistance.

    Tracking stations will typically witness the uncontrolled return of at least one piece of space debris every day; and on average, one intact defunct spacecraft or old rocket body will come back into the atmosphere every week.

    Something the size of Nasa's UARS satellite is seen to enter uncontrolled perhaps once a year.

    Much larger objects such as space station cargo ships return from orbit several times a year, but they are equipped with thrusters capable of guiding their dive into a remote part of the Southern Ocean.

    Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-15402157

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